> ...except for a very few productivity applications where UI responsiveness actually matters for increasing employee output (fewer than you’d think).
If there is UI, UI responsiveness matters for employee output.
Research that has been done on this topic suggests that increase in UI latency non-linearly decreases user productivity, whith the ultimate effect on the cost of doing business.
And that has been known for decades - take a look at the "The Economic Value of Rapid Response Time" from 1982:
If there is UI, UI responsiveness matters for employee output.
Research that has been done on this topic suggests that increase in UI latency non-linearly decreases user productivity, whith the ultimate effect on the cost of doing business.
And that has been known for decades - take a look at the "The Economic Value of Rapid Response Time" from 1982:
https://jlelliotton.blogspot.com/p/the-economic-value-of-rap...
It's puzzling to me why businisses still don't prioritize UI latency, but it's not a rational decision.
Perhaps it's just human nature, as hinted in the linked article:
"...few executives are aware that such a balance is economically and technically feasible."